My experience in NJ suggests that most of the police don't want to find out the real story. I'm a little surprised at this happening in Camden County. The City of Camden is a cesspool but the areas around it are usually not too bad. Most of NJ below Trenton isn't as rife with corruption and police state mentality as from Trenton North.Jumping Frog wrote:Two words: voice recorder.
Or if you prefer one word: video.
I will not have any interaction with the government or an agent of the government that is not documented.
Failing that, seems like this was a public meeting with other members of the public present as witnesses. Shouldn't be too hard for the police to find out the real story.
Antisemitism could have been a factor. While NJ has large segments of Jewish communities, tolerance in other areas can be quite limited. Reading the article about the cornerstone of the problem being the Undocumented assumptions as to the interior of the house. I'd be willing to be a tidy sum that those assumptions border on the outlandish and were punitive.
Lest you doubt the level of corruption in these blue State and how local governments abuse their citizens because of, we lived in a small Philadelphia suburb where the head plumbing inspector for the city was a brother to the head of the local plumbing union. Everyone knew that there was no way that a non-union plumbing job was ever going to pass inspection in that town. The town paid a bounty to the trash company workers to find plumbing parts in the trash and report the addresses. The plumbing inspector claimed the right to inspect those house because of suspected fraud. Fortunately for us, we never got caught. Appraisals were also done via the buddy network. Inequity abounded on very similar houses on the same street. Even if you were affected, you kept your mouth shut. Things could always get worse if you ran afoul of the wrong people.
Generally speaking, the politicians and the local police chiefs in NJ do not believe that private citizens should own any guns. An opportunity to enforce that is rarely passed up.